Visualizing death and burial: past and present
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Published:2013-10-23
Issue:5
Volume:26
Page:709-713
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ISSN:1041-6102
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Container-title:International Psychogeriatrics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Int. Psychogeriatr.
Abstract
The image used to illustrate this editorial comes from a late medievalBook of Hoursand shows some of the rituals related to death and burial at the time (Figure 1). For the Christian people of medieval Western Europe death was not only a common occurrence, but also one that was illustrated in many places in their lives. In their churches they would see sculptures of the Last Judgment above the front doors, a Dance of Death inside the back door, and along the walls funerary monuments. Above them were stained glass windows as well as altarpieces that might show the Death of the Virgin or other saints. At home there would be more panel paintings, as well as the illuminations of death-related rituals in the Office of the Dead in their books of hours, and the woodcuts of the Good Death in theirArs Moriendibooks.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology
Reference15 articles.
1. Death illuminated: representations of mortality in books of hours;Yvard;Irish Arts Review Yearbook,2002
Cited by
1 articles.
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